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Show Sl Eg):,.';},, he fees his grave gaping undes him, firely Tnuf need tak ever fte wit horrour an th %"3;‘ ‘utmof caution ' South A {kilful d.anccr on the rOpesti‘[ns willingly, an . %\ makes a feeming ftumble that you may think hi 4y in great hazard, while he is only giving yau a proo " of his dexterity Dryden If after fome diftinguifh'd lea He drops his pole, and feems to flip Straight gath'ring all his a&ive ftrength Pk He rifes higher half his length ., To flide; to glide ™ Oh Ladon, happy Ladon Prior rather flide than ru " by her, left thou thouldft mak her legs flip fro her St iney They trim their feathers, which makes the eily and flippery, that the water may flip off them Mortinser 4 To move or fly out of place Sometimes the ancle-bone is‘apt to turn out o , either fide, by reafon of relaxation, which thoug . you reduce, yet, upon the leaft walking on it, th . ‘bone flips out again Wifeman To fneak ; to {link From her moft beaftly compan 1°gan refrain, in mind to flip away . Soon as appear'd fafe opportunity Spenfer When Judas faw that his hoft /lipz away, he wa fore tronbled 1 Mac.ix. 7 Tl flip down out of my lodging. Dryd. D. §cb Thus one tradefman flips away To give his partnerfairer play Prior To glide;; to pafs unexpectedly or imperceptibly i The banks of either fide feeming arms of th juloving earth, that fain would embrace it, and th river a wantop nymph, which ftill would ffip fro Lit Sidney The blefling of the Lord fhall flip from tlle)e without doing thee any good, if thou haft not ceafe from doing evil Taylor Sligping from thy mother's eye, thou went'i lone into the temple ; there was foun 7! T:Among the graveft rabbies difputant On points 2nd queftions fitting Mofes® chair. Milt SL SL Thrice around his neck his arms he threw And thrice the fiitting fhadow Slipp'd away Like winds or empty dreams that fly the day Diryden Though with pale cheeks, wet beard, and dropping hair None but my. Ceyx could appear fo fair L would have frain'd him with a ftrict embrace But through my arms he flipz, and vanith'd fro the place Dyryden Yie the moft proper methods to retain the idea you have acquired; for the min is ready to le flips, and of every branch an heap is made. Hooker The flips of their vines have been _brought int Watts Abb Spain Adoption ftrives with nature, and choice breed Shakefp A native flip to us from foreign ;‘}-cd.s. Thy mother took into her blameful be Some ftern untutor'd churl, and noble ftoc many of them /lip, unlefs fome pains be taken to fi them upon-the memory 70 Svir. @, a 1. To convey fecretly In his officious attendance upoh his miftrefs h tried to flip a powder into her drink Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull z. To lofe by negligence You are not now to think what *s beft to do As in beginnings; but what muft be done B‘c:ng thus enter'd ; and /lip no advantag That may fecure you Ben Fonfon's Cataline Let us not flip th® occafion, whether fcor Or fatiate fury yield it from our foe Milton One ill man may not think of the mifchief h could do, or ffip the occafion L' Efirange To flip the market, when thus fairly offered,i great imprudence Collier For watching. occafions to corre others in thei difcourfe, and not to flip any opportunity of fhewin their talents, fcholars are moft blamed Locke Thus far my author has Slipt his firfe defign not a letter of what has been yet faid promotin any ways the trial Atterbury 3. To part twig laceration fro the mai body b The runners fpread from the mafter-roots, an have little fprouts or roots to them, which, bein cut four or five inche long, make excellent fet the branches alfo may be flipped and planted Mortimer's Hufbandry 4. To efcape from ; to leav flily This bird you aim'd at, thoug -Oh you hit it not Sir, Lucentio flizp'd me like his greyhound Which runs himfelf, and catches for his mafter Shakefpeare 5. To let loofe On Eryx altars lay A lamb new fallen to the formy fea Then flips his haulfers, and his anchors weighs Dryden 6. To let a dog loofe The impatient greyhound, flipt from far Bounds o'er the glebe to courfe the fearful hare Dryden 7. To throw off any thing that holds one Forced to alight, my horfe flipped his bridle, an ran away Saift 8. To pafs over negligently If our author gives us a lift of his do&rines, wit what reafon can that about indulgences be Sippe over Atterbury. Rogers fVcfilpped. by fince Tofall into fault or errour Savift to Pope "If he had been as you And youas he, you would have flips like him But b, like Yyou, would not have been fo fiern Shakefpeare 5 One flispeth in his fpeech, but not from hi Ecclus An eloquent man is known far a d near; but man of ‘underftanding knoweth whe he Jlippeik Ecclyse xxis 7 ocreep by overfight .SOmC miftakes may have_/Ii‘bt into it ; but o her will be prevented Pope me mory y By the: hearer it s fill prefprefiumed, that i i the i y ?;n]:':fl'f' for the prefent, what good foever the I 'nis loft, and that without all hope of reco T‘h 2% 4 h ‘,f Hooker athematician proceeds upon propofition fhratie once demqn{trated; and though the emon /) a So have I feen fome tender [lip Sav'd with care from winter's nip ‘The pride of her carnation train Miltsm Pluck'd up by fome unheedy fwain They are propagated not only by the feed, bu many alfo by the root, and fome by flips or cuttings Ray on the Creation 4. A leathor ftring in whicha dog is held from its being fo made ®5 to {flip or become loofe by relaxation of the hand I fee you ftand like greyhounds in the fligs Straining upon the ftart. Shakefpeare's Henry V God is faid to harden the heart permifiively, bu not operatively, nor effectively ; as he who only let loofe a greyhound out of the flip, is faid to houn him at the hare Bramball 5- An efcape ; a defertion. I know no whether 10 give the flip be not originall taken from a dog tha rans and leave the firing or /%7p in the leader's hand The more thame for her goodythip To give fo near a friend the flip Hudibras The daw did not like his companion, and gav him-the flig, and away into the woods. L' Effrange Theirexplications are not yours, and will give yo the flip Locke 6. A long narrow piece Between thefe eaftern and weftern mountain lies a flip of lower ground, which runs acrofs th ifland Addifon SvLi'pBoARD. . f. [fip and board board fliding in grooves I ventured ¢o draw back the fliphoard on the roof contrived on purpofe to let in air. Gulliv.Travels Svr'rrNoT. 7./ [ fip and knot. knot; a knot eafily untied A bow They draw off fo much line as is neceffary, an faften the reft upon the line-rowl with a flipkrnoe &very mifpent hour which has Jipped from them 2 IWJI} impute no defeét to thofe two years whic of violets in the earth koot 5 and then a flipknot, which may be loofene upon inflammation Sharpe ing holes in their bodies, and putting into ther earth holpen with muck, and fetting feeds or :hold of it again ST P 7 gf o th lv rbi Addifor's Speétator foe.men watch every opportunity, and retrieve 1. The a& of {lipping; falfe ftep Was graft with crab-tree flip, whofe fruit thou art Shakefpeare Trees are apparelled with flowers or herbs by bor that no more line turn oft Moxon's Mechs Exerc In large wounds a fingle knot firft; over this little linen comprefs, on which is another fingl . When a corn flips out of their paws, they tak by heat of contention they are divided into man &:'ay have flipt out of his memory, he build truth Addifon 2. Errour ; miftake ; fault There put on hi What forgeries you pleafe: masry, none fo ran As may difhonour him But, Sir, fuch wanton, wild, and ufual flips As are moft known to youth and liberty. Shakefp Of the promife there made, our mafter hat failed us, by flip of memory, or injury of time Wottor's Architecture This religious affe@ion, which nature has im planted in man, woul {he could commit be the mo enormous fli ore One cafual flip is enough to weigh down th faithful fervice of a long life L'Eftrange Alonzo, mark the charaéters And if th> impoftor's pen have made a fli That fhews it counterfeit, mark that and fave me Dryden Lighting upon a very eafy flip I have made, i putting one feemingly indifferent word for another that difcovery opened to me this prefent view Locke Any little flip is more confpicuous and obfervabl in a good man's conduét than in another's, as it i notof a piece with his charaer Addif. Speciator 3. A twig torn from the main ftock In truth, they are fewer, when they com to b difcufied by reafon, than otherwife they feem, whe Svr'peer or Slipfhees n. [ [from flip. 1. A fhoe without leather behind, into whic the foot flips eafily A gown made of the fineft wool Which from our pretty lambs we pull Fair lined flippers for the cold With buckles of the purelt gold Raleigh If he went abroad too much, fhe'd uf To give him flippers, and lock up his fhoes. King Thric rung the betl, the flipper knock'd th ground And the prefs'd watch return'd a filver found. Pope 2. [crefpis, Lat. SL1'pPER adj An herb [rhpup Saxon. Slip pery ; not firm. Obfolete. Perhaps never in ufe but for poetical convenience A truftlefs ftate of earthly things, and flipper hop Of mortal men, that fwinke and fieat for nought Spenfer SLr'PPERILY. adw. [from flippery.] I a {lippery manner SLIPPERINESS. 7./0 [fror{\_/lz‘_;spe'g'. 1. State or quality of being dippery fmoothnefs ; glibnefs P W |